these are NOT official Open University Web pages
My
experience as a student in:
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Development Studies:
Human, Community and Environmental |
OU Courses I Have Taken
In the Fall of 2002, I went back to formal studies for the first time
in more than 14 years -- and for the first time, post graduate studies. I
pursued a Masters degree in
Development
Management at The Open University, which is based in the United
Kingdom. In this context,
development means intentional actions,
in the form of projects and programs, meant to improve social, economic,
health and environmental well-being of a community or region. It usually
also means working to preserve cultural aspects of the target area. That
means development relating to human development, community development,
environmental development, institutional development, country development,
etc. How does one successfully manage activities and initiatives meant to
improve people's lives and their environment, and address critical
situations such as HIV/AIDS, violence and discrimination against women,
child labor, illiteracy, environmental destruction, hunger, and so forth,
in sustainable ways and ways that respect local culture - local language,
history, food, community practices, etc.
What's wonderful about studying development management is that its
applicable to so many, many professional and personal settings, in
any
country. I officially finished in December 2005, when I turned in
my
final paper, just three months shy of my 40th birthday, and since
then, I've used the materials from courses again and again
in
various work, including in
Afghanistan
and
Ukraine
and in the USA. I've seen the lessons from these courses affirmed over and
over.
The MSc in Development Management at
The
Open University is taught by
more
than 20 faculty members that are a part of an interdisciplinary
group which includes economists, sociologists, geographers, scientists,
engineers and political scientists. Each course required approximately 300
hours of study.
OU was established in 1969 and is based at Walton Hall, Milton Keynes,
in Buckinghamshire. OU is the biggest university in the UK for
undergraduate education and the largest academic institution in the UK
(and one of the largest in Europe) by student number, and qualifies as one
of the world's largest universities. The OU actively engages in research.
For instance, the OU's Planetary and Space Sciences Research Institute has
become particularly well known through its involvement in a variety of
international space missions. The Open University is one of only three UK
higher education institutions to gain accreditation in the USA by the
Middle
States Commission on Higher Education, an institutional accrediting
agency, recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Council for
Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA).
It is very helpful in going for the OU MSc in Development Management if
you already have experience, as a volunteer or as a professional, in
helping a community
anywhere address a particular issue,
educating a particular group of people about a specific issue, etc.
My
professional, volunteer and activism experience in the USA gave me
the background I needed as much as
my
UNDP-related development work abroad to understand and relate to
what I learned in these courses. For instance, before I started working
for the UN, I had worked with American Indians in California who were
relocated off their reservations through the 1970s, worked in initiatives
that brought theater to youth who would never have experienced such
otherwise, worked with a nonprofit organization promoting access to
technology and tech education for people with disabilities, and undertaken
advocacy work for various reproductive rights groups -- all of these
experiences were incredibly helpful in relating to what I studied (let
alone to working abroad in development for the UN).
According to OU materials, nearly all OU students are part-time and
about 70% of students remain in full-time employment throughout their
studies. OU courses are considered to be among the world's best distance
education materials. Several people at
UNDP's UNV headquarters, where I worked until February 2005, got or
were pursuing Master's Degrees through OU.
Courses I took for the degree:
TU871
Development: Context and Practice
Completed in Spring 2003
This is not a mandatory course, but OU strongly recommends that TU871 be
your first course in the Development Management degree, particularly if
you have never taken an OU course. I could not agree more. It's an
excellent course. It gives you the knowledge and framework for ALL of the
other courses, and is a kind of training course for how to get through any
OU grad course successfully. Even if you have a background in development,
even of many years, this course is essential, IMO. I also think it
is a great course for those pursuing a degree in Environmental Decision
Making or Environmental Policy. In fact, I think it's a great stand-alone
course. If you are overwhelmed by the amount of reading in this course,
then beware: the other OU Development Management courses have much
more required reading. Also
see TU871 on the OU open module site.
TU870
Capacities for Managing Development
Completed in Fall 2003
For me, this was the most practical of the OU courses regarding
development management -- and the hardest, in terms of successfully
completing assignments (I flunked one, in fact). And, yet, I did very,
very well on the final exam, better than people who had done well on the
assignments (I think part of that is that they had much better tutors than
me, who graded very differently). Good tutor support and interaction with
other OU students via the online community on First Class is, IMO,
absolutely essential to getting a good grade in this course, so you should
login to the OU intranet via First Class regularly. It has four
assignments (TMAs), all of equal value, though you can substitute your
second lowest grade for your lowest. Also
see TU870 on the OU open module site.
TU872
Institutional Development: Conflicts, Values and Meanings
Completed in Spring 2004
Although not reflected in my grades (which were much better than TU870),
I found this course VERY difficult. Thank goodness it has only two major
TMAs, and, for the first time in my OU experience, I had a really
supportive, helpful tutor. Like TU870, this course provides very
practical information regarding development management. When I took it,
this course included a residential school, where you go onsite for a
weekend to apply mapping and modeling to mock negotiation and brokering
exercises. The residential school has now been made optional, and its
own course. I cannot imagine getting what you should out of TU872
without going to the residential school -- it's a must, as it makes
mapping and modeling come to life (I wouldn't have understood them
without the rezzy school). There are other good reasons to go as well:
the Development Management professors will do extra workshops, such as
an orientation about preparing for TU874 (see below); you get to
meet many of the tutors and course authors, which will help you in later
courses; and you get to meet other students face-to-face, which is
marvelous and even therapeutic. Interaction with other OU students via
the online community was *very* helpful, if not essential, for this
course, so you should login to the OU intranet via First Class regularly.
Also
see TU872 on the OU open module site.
D830
Ecology, Justice and Citizenship
Completed in October 2004
If you are concerned about the environment, regardless of your
professional or volunteer experience (or lack there of), you will love
this course. I found the readings much easier than my previous two
courses, and in taking this course, I realized that I very much want to
work for an organization focused on the environment -- something I had
never realized before. Like TU871, this is a perfect start if
you are new to OU -- if you don't have a great tutor, you can still do
okay in this course (although I was lucky and, for the second time, I
had a really good tutor). It's also a good course to take after a
particularly-difficult one -- it will feel like a break! I followed my
own advice regarding writing TMAs for this course (advice that I
didn't really solidify until after I had already taken three courses),
and my grades went up 10 - 18 points! D830 is in a different department
than my previous courses, which are all a part of the Global Programme
in Development Management. There is no official online forum for this
course, which is shameful on the part of whomever decided such;
there's NO excuse not to have one. For those of us outside the United
Kingdom, an online forum is ESSENTIAL. I talked to some alumni of this
course before I started, which was very helpful, and I was lucky to
connect with a few students via the Internet who were also taking the
course (thanks to our tutor sharing our email addresses with each
other). An OU student created an
unofficial online forum for all students in D83x courses; it is
external to the OU system, and worth a visit if you enroll in a D83x
course. Also
see D830 on the OU open module site.
T89 Technology Policy and Innovation Research
Completed in April 2005
Based on the official OU description of T89, I thought this course would
be quite relevant my work with civil society/mission-based
organizations, particularly regarding the development of online
services, capacity-building, and community technology centers. Turns out
that it is a misleading description. My many problems with this course:
- It focused mostly on mechanical, engineering, industrial and
commercial development processes; there's little emphasis on
development issues. The course defined innovation almost exclusively
in terms of increased profits - there's just one case where a
non-profit example of innovation is presented. Either the course
description needs to change to reflect this for-profit emphasis, or,
the course needs to change.
- There was obviously a high expectation by the course designers that
students would regularly participate in the online discussion forum
for this course, engaging together per the many, many, many discussion
questions offered in the course materials. It was a completely
unrealistic expectation: students rarely participated in the
online forum -- it was quiet for weeks, and on the rarity there is a
post, it was usually just for clarification of a deadline date. Some
questions posted to the forum were never answered. There was no online
action taken by tutors to encourage online participation (and such
action is always essential to get an online group going).
- My tutor rarely took a proactive role in helping his students, and
provided no information on what a good TMA answer might look like.
This is the only course for which my own
advice regarding writing TMAs wouldn't work -- I never had any
idea how to write a good TMA for this course... and the lack of tutor
comments on TMAs only compounded the problem. My tutor merely graded
my TMAs -- there was little actual "tutoring."
- Tutors in this course refused to say what the grade point spread
among students for each assignment was, making it impossible for a
student to know how he or she is doing in comparison with others (it's
very comforting to see how many students are at the same level, or
even below, as you are when it comes to grades -- and insightful and
sometimes inspirational to see how many students are doing better).
- I took this course the first time it had been offered remotely, and
it had quite a disorganized feel -- for instance, conflicting
deadlines for the start date and for assignments were given. And there
were no sample exams available.
If you are a mechanical or industrial engineer, a scientist, work in
commercial development (particularly manufacturing), or a PhD student who
adores methodology, you will love this course - if it's still offered (I'm
not sure it is). Unless your work in development management is highly
focused on mechanical improvements to commercial/industrial production of
some kind, choose a different course.
TU874
The Development Management Project
Completed in October 2005
This course involves designing and carrying out a research project on a
development subject of my choice. This was
my LAST OU course, ending three years of post-graduate study. If you are
going to take TU874, here is my advice: (1)
If you are working or volunteering for a mission-based organization
(non-profit, non-governmental organization/NGO, civil society, public
sector/government agency, school, etc.), I strongly suggest you tie your
TU874 topic to that organization, or to organizations with which you
collaborate, so that your work on TU874 can be part of your work for
your organization. Why? Because you will not have time to do
something completely exterior to your job or volunteering. Your
development topic will require you to talk to organizations and
individuals engaged in a particular type of work or collaborations, and
the most convenient people to talk to are, ofcourse, at your
organization, or at those organizations with which you collaborate. If I
had had a job while taking this course, I could never have undertaken
the research that I did, because I would not have had time to make
all of the connections and do the research I needed on this subject
matter, which is completely exterior to my professional and volunteer
life of the last 15 years. (2) Start
brainstorming development organizations or aspects of their work that
you want to research a year or more before you start TU874, and start
collecting a few publications, articles or previous research on the
topic as early as possible, before you even enroll in TU874, to get a
"feel" for the topic(s). This will give you a HUGE advantage when you
actually start the course. But remember to report on all this work in
your first TMA, even though it happened before you started the course.
You can see a list
of OU TU874 Final Reports for six years, through 2004
How much do you think all
of the materials for all of the above weighs? You can read the official
descriptions of each course I've listed above.
Also see How I Studied and my Advice
for TMAs and Exams
In November 2007, I started taking a free course through Open
University's open content initiative, OpenLearn.
The 43 units of study offered through OpenLearn are spread across nine
subject areas: Arts & History, Business & Management, Education,
IT & Computing, Mathematics & Statistics, Science & Nature,
Society and Study Skills & Language Learning. In short: it's free
university courses online, except you don't pay... and you aren't graded.
I'm currently taking Achieving public dialogue (S802_1), which
looks at active forms of involvement by the public in policy relating to
science: how is the public voice heard and understood? What is public
involvement of this type for and is the outcome in some way betterš than
traditional methods of policy making? What do phrases like "public
consultation," "public engagement" and "scientific literacy" really mean?
How do non-experts weigh the risks and benefits that science offers?
Why am I taking this OpenLearn course? Several reasons:
- I have a keen interest in the impact
of rumor, myths and "urban legends" on development interventions,
aid work and relief efforts, ways such have been addressed in various
situations, and ways to prevent such from becoming a problem that
defeats a much-needed program or activity.
- I'm always interested in improving my professional communication
skills, and further professional development in general
- I know that any course associated with OU is of high quality and
relevance
Only downside of OpenLearn: it requires that you use a latest web browser.
So if you use an older operating system and cannot update your browser, you
are locked out of many of the features (but not the reading materials).
Also see:
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